g fa r * n 
. a : 
31—1852.] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
Home mney 
> Out-door xa a; 
ority of the 
all sides. sed the most remarkable instance 
in t of a young — «ha 
several inches long, but in one day it was as completely 
pp rare tie gg he t had a root for 
At the same —— 
old = system ; as it will enable the cultivator 
rapes much finer, to a certainty, in less TS 
autumn, I — some 1 52 to any previous 
season. Your readers r a boon upon the 
humbler classes by g 
perusing “ Hoare on the Vine. W 
e sys 
y. i — 4, the prin- 
ed —— —.— be supplied with one or more copies, 
by 80 more influential inhabitants. The 
= is is thë easiest learnt of all the 4 — pruning 
1 ve read. Your 437, wri 
more particularly to those pec uv slanting young 
Vines: that is v — I would as 
to brin 
i 
them | 
il (not ripen) the fruit; and to let 
y the 2 ver grow its —4 N 
until Ist September, so as to gain substance for bearing 
next ae: when all the old wood should de “out of sight | 
and out of min 
t be cut out in —— 8 
rt of Pea with le pods, but I have — 
eaten them on the Continent, and had the euriosity to 
tness t p the kitchen. They t 
if any one attempts 
process, they will nave iniything ut 
The pod is as 
is done. F. P. 
The Cloth 
in excellent style, and has 
; t 
— without that 
dis 
case it was on a south wall. A. Matthew, Moore A 
Mon nastereren, July 21. 
Coup de Soleil in Plants, dc. ro — * E . 
your correspondent “J. R oaks,” 
early in 
6.1 F. Colley's garden, ir in this county Elin = this | 
bbey, 
as animals ; and 
— have, er ae too many instances of lives 
ethar mar er of 1852 to be soon forgotten. 1 this 
7 Sp pour 
— and in 1 situations, 
materially, having the appear- 
scalded or scorched, and in sAn 4 
great quantitiés i Peas off. In 
i rri 
were so completely sco 
eas, 
Curran cially black, w 
on the sonth side of ms plants, that the fruit was qui 
useless, and the leaves could be rubbed up like pasts 
cases 
— 5 3 3 also 
my o an the old mature 
leaves of of —— Azaleas, s, Magnolias, Laurels, 
pau and as tender as the Pea, whet that | i 
fi 
of Gold Rose has flowered here this season | of 
sandy, | o 
` 9 
1 Broo a Blac 
er- Ws Black Prince Strawberry. a find this to be 
excellent 9 both for the open ground and for 
forcing, and say that I am somewhat disa 
pointed at not it 
horticultural exhibitions this season. 
great credit from my employers — others for growing 
it in pots; ey pronoun excellent in 
flavour, good in colour, and 
ink it ought to have a place in 
method of growing it differs little 1 = 1 
cultivating the Keens’ 
g. 
runners in small thumb 2 in which I n “ai u w 
r sei the pot becom well filled with roots ; 
14 N 4 is not a strong growi 
attained in A aaeh 
sandy loa) art good old Mushroom dung, 
mixed well t — 1 had * Jong shelf filed with 
this variety this season ; 8 re ripe in the * 
— of April, = were — eah of all who sa 
Joseph Mi ree i, lien, 1 1 Berks. 
Roses at 4 ur very proper 
definition (see p. 468), 4 wy ‘a gone footstalk is, 
would have required no re from me, had a 
reflection not been cast on the pran giving the cup to 
with buds. Now, the ooms exhibited by Mr. 
Mitchell certainly had a adita 8 sm ae bud 2 Aa, 
attached to them, 2 require cety to dis 
Th we thay — “of 
Noisettes, which were . e in * — 8 stands. There 
fin i 
and show them. 
ree and four full-blown Roses, besides 
1 5 whieh ee 4 a nae ot any more than 
lea tee Er l of — ve we — 
consulted, an they a alle — to the same conelus 
CHRONICLE. 
485 
masses. Recourse was now had to gentle fires, and in 
a few ap women 
2 É 
1 
time in his practice ; for the cause of which he can offer 
no explanation. Cray mi 
ct —I am obliged 
p” (see p. 437). or we answer to my inquiry 
— the H yac acinth. trea owever, 
— their roots an do not rai 
tment 
mode of preventing the avon 
after its first flowering, would co 
the gardening 3 — ty, ſor 
procuring ne is Elen, and yet, at the 
same time, there oy no flower equal to ‘the yacinth for 
making the early spring garden gay and lively. Early 
owers, as 1 know, are like friends of youthful 
days, gree ith a warmth of feeling which 
friends seldom excite. My particular object is to learn 
how I ma i their 
y, what I 8 
ing a frech 
My subject of complaint is one 
from the very commencement of cultivation 
bid oa —.— dia et multo spectata labore, 
erare tamen, ni vis ot ney quotannis 
ma qua que manu legeret; sic omnia fatis 
9 peress ruere ao retro 2 referri,” 
s | If modern science can in this instance, at leas 
m 
an evil of such ancient standing, I am sure oy bii 
very many who would feel much gratified b being 
won in it. 7. [Consult our columns 2 1842, 
Peg 
experimental ery: works has 
to make assurance gens sure, the high constable; “ho 
N — roger asked i 
where quired, — disqualify ? "He 
: distinctly sid “ Certainly, yes; 48 Roses, and no more, 
o bes 
own.” I hope after ‘this, — Paul 
ond Cat 20 will be satisfied. John Keynes, one of the 
Censor s, Salis burg. 
071. 
ic Works,— 
b pot pes “within 150 yards of my . 
e 9 lost a eaves, 
* ts, and man * 
suddenly, as if burnt, while othe ers 
spotted over with white sara * ach ‘nit 
rine t ci sci 
some of the causes of Grape chaning 4 have stated 
what 
co 
knowledge of gardening, either 
practically or theoretically, built some new fore reing 
hey are 
throw should have the white deposit analysed. 
begging that yo will favour me with your 
opinion — the a ces caused by the 
rom the sere or whether, as one person 
only are ej pono er 
(The idea of “blight” — 
p ediino dar 7 works. Tee 
1 
Glass Puls. — The i oe 7 N ee. 
details e Ped to these walls being mo 
than ciently re reply privately T ahali be glad 
it 
well be lost sight of, Now, er ge miha e gentleman 
in in question employed a good gardener, * — establish- 
was considerable, he 1 
border on his o vn plan, an com it ‘of mate 
mpounded under his especial care 
nd was excavated some 5 feet in 10 pth, 
até width from the houses Phar as an out- 
was | ifficult, and would involve too 
is with them only I have to do, = others may an 
COLMSH UCULO 
hey were not, and had not been, — trom the want dite 
of water. 0 
The e young shoots and foliage 
same plants were shriv 
except fi ite 
upon the 
varietie 
em; even Camellias 
as, but 
2 
were scorched 
ond wh thn h —.— — 
where, through the water 
being shallower, on of the leaves a erect, 
those which laid n 
accounted fo for! 
is 
. | excavated for 
y | and no efficient drai 
were 
That satisfied wi 
tches, prin 
deficient in — pi 
ious mixture was 
the purpose to the . — teary 6 feet, a 
was placed at ; the 
water being supposed to find its way ae — dead wells 
without . artificial means for conducting it, beyond 
a few cross drains. Under these — young Vines 
were planted, and for a season o all progressed 
— wate iant sun- 
3 not to be 
per sende hie ordi wad newly iy nl and 
new Vines plan anted, under proper di 
ot ue Ti 
stance. resent year a Vinery, with an 
llent 
e berries in 
The soil composing the border 
a great ad is respect over the 
brick or stone wall. I am frequently asked if wa open- 
ing the sashes the sas gets 9 br 
had a single square ce the 1 
y a simp contri 
side p“ the all cnn mmediately 
—— as fully e expo a 
8 wait gi rotected on 
wing und 
great sdvantage is this, that 
both sides of the wall the 
almost as thoug om 
that I T aball de gd 
suggestion iain er d 
if it can? 
stems 
I have taken the liberty of naming the 
en ?—I have not 
The whole . the ighis are firmly and Kr “Ser 5 
